Best Response

WACC_attack has hit the big ones. There is another less well known group called Swank Capital that manages in excess of $1 billion and focuses on investing MLPs (Master Limited Partnerships), commodities and some other related assets. Another is Saracen which managed about $1.5B in mid-07 but has hit a rough patch as of late. I'm not sure what current AUM is nor the status of the business. Check out http://www.reuters.com/article/oilRpt/idUSN1555824420080215?pageNumber=… for recent rumors on the firm. This is a pure play on the energy strategy that blew up Amaranth.

HBK and Carlson have their main offices in Dallas to MMmonkey's post above.

There are some other smaller groups in Dallas as well. One or more were started by ex-members of HBK and Carlson.

A number of other big HFs have offices/people in Dallas and/or Houston to focus primarily on energy-related investing (local presence is always nice for these sorts of deals).

 

HBK has a pretty good reputation but are very well known for being overly-hedged in their trades. This is not your SAC alpha-cowboy trading floor but a pretty quiet place that does not like excessive risk. Recent edition of Absolute Return magazine had a cover story on them to review. They have been around for a while and the main partnership is pretty solid. They have formerly been extremely sticky with their recruiting academic requirements--meaning only the top tier Ivy league schools (especially Harvard). But in the last 1-2 years, they have been less focused on academic pedigree (although it still helps). One of the senior guys was telling me that they realized it was not helping them one bit with such stingy Ivy-league only requirements because all they ended up with was a bunch of rich kids. They also used to be famous for ranking the other hedge funds that they wanted to hire people from. If I recall correctly there were 4 tiers and there was only one other fund in the 1st tier that they felt was as good as them...

 

i know a few people at HBK. the folks on the research and strategy side tend to come from very quantitative backgrounds, including electrical engineering, applied math, and statistics masters/PhD's. i think this is understandable. on the trading side, that's where you'll see more MBA's and professionals with relevant work experience, and less of an abundance of technical degrees.

​* http://www.linkedin.com/in/numicareerconsulting
 

top dallas funds are maverick, hbk, carlson, highland... if you find somebody in the industry it'll make your search so much easier. also, another tip, it seems like resumes actually mailed on nice paper in a nice envelope seem to actually get attention...

 

sizewise, yes. HBK and maverick are huge hedge funds. carlson is smaller. highland is mostly fixed income, not a typical hedge fund....supposedly has over $30 billion under management... yet as far as i understand it, they have numerous investment vehicles and the hedge fund itself is much smaller than that...

 

i want to work at Highland bad, my background? non target, 3.0 GPA. BB Ops 2 yrs, 31 yrs old, CFA L1 candid.. fuck it. exiting the industry. no chance. just going to sell some coke or real estate kind of a wide range there.

 
Creolebway:

i want to work at Highland bad, my background? non target, 3.0. BB Ops 2 yrs, 31 yrs old, CFA L1 candid.. fuck it. exiting the industry. no chance. just going to sell some coke or real estate kind of a wide range there.

Really? http://www.m2mevolution.com/news/2006/09/03/1855166.htm

everybody must log into a software program that tracks work hours

 

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Disclaimer for the Kids: Any forward-looking statements are solely for informational purposes and cannot be taken as investment advice. Consult your moms before deciding where to invest.
 

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